San Francisco Chronicle

Southwest Airlines says it will stop overbookin­g

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Southwest Airlines plans to stop overbookin­g flights — an industry practice implicated in an ugly incident on a United Airlines flight that has damaged United’s reputation with the flying public.

Last year Southwest bumped 15,000 passengers off flights, more than any other U.S. airline. Carriers say they sometimes sell more tickets than there are seats because often a few passengers don’t show up.

Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said Thursday that the airline had been thinking about ending overbookin­g for “a long time” because of fewer and fewer no-shows. But the issue gained more urgency after the United incident, he said.

Beth Harbin, a Southwest spokeswoma­n, said Thursday that with better forecastin­g tools and a new reservatio­ns system coming online next month the airline will no longer have a need to overbook flights.

Politician­s in Washington and elsewhere have called for a ban on oversellin­g flights. Some critics have said airlines should leave a few seats empty if they think they will be needed by crew members.

JetBlue is currently the only major U.S. airline with a stated policy that bans overbookin­g. United said Thursday that it plans to reduce overbookin­g but not eliminate it.

Dallas’ Southwest did not put a time frame on the policy change. And Kelly noted that Southwest may still need to bump people if, for instance, the airline substitute­s a smaller plane for the one originally scheduled, which happens occasional­ly.

Kelly was asked on an earnings conference call if the move could impact Southwest’s results. He said ending overbookin­g would have a minor impact on revenue but gave no figures.

Chief Financial Officer Tammy Romo said doing away with overbookin­g would reduce costs — airlines compensate passengers for giving up their seats — which would offset some of the revenue hit.

 ?? Pat Sullivan / Associated Press ?? Southwest Airlines chief executive Gary Kelly
Pat Sullivan / Associated Press Southwest Airlines chief executive Gary Kelly

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